Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
A demultiplexer for digital media files, or media demultiplexer, also called a file splitter by laymen or consumer software providers, is software that demultiplexes individual elementary streams of a media file, e.g., audio, video, or subtitles and sends them to their respective decoders for actual decoding. [1]
Schematic of a 1-to-2 demultiplexer. Like a multiplexer, it can be equated to a controlled switch. In electronics , a multiplexer (or mux ; spelled sometimes as multiplexor ), also known as a data selector , is a device that selects between several analog or digital input signals and forwards the selected input to a single output line. [ 1 ]
A DWDM terminal demultiplexer. At the remote site, the terminal de-multiplexer consisting of an optical de-multiplexer and one or more wavelength-converting transponders separates the multi-wavelength optical signal back into individual data signals and outputs them on separate fibers for client-layer systems (such as SONET/SDH).
3-to-8 line decoder/demultiplexer, address latch, active high outputs 16 CD74HC237: 74x238 1 3-to-8 line decoder/demultiplexer, active high outputs 16 CD74HC238: 74x239 2 dual 2-to-4 line decoder/demultiplexer, active high outputs 16 SN74HC239: 74x240 8 octal buffer, inverting outputs Schmitt trigger three-state 20 SN74LS240: 74x241 8
A device that performs the multiplexing is called a multiplexer (MUX), and a device that performs the reverse process is called a demultiplexer (DEMUX or DMX). Inverse multiplexing (IMUX) has the opposite aim as multiplexing, namely to break one data stream into several streams, transfer them simultaneously over several communication channels ...
The orange lines only illustrate the light path. The light path from (1) to (5) is a demultiplexer, from (5) to (1) a multiplexer. Conventional silica-based AWGs, as illustrated in the figure above, are planar lightwave circuits fabricated by depositing layers of doped and undoped silica on a silicon substrate.
An address decoder is a particular use of a binary decoder circuit known as a "demultiplexer" or "demux" (the 74154 is commonly called a "4-to-16 demultiplexer"), which has many other uses besides address decoding. Address decoders are fundamental building blocks for systems that use buses.
A demultiplexer can be achieved by cascading multiple drop sections of the OADM, where each drop element uses an FBG set to the wavelength to be demultiplexed. Conversely, a multiplexer can be achieved by cascading multiple add sections of the OADM. FBG demultiplexers and OADMs can also be tunable.